Bowl thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Ceramics, Room 145

Bowl

1882-5 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This stoneware vase, with its stylized pattern of leaves and blossom, enriched with gilding is in the Japanese style. The elevation of stoneware to an art medium in France followed the exhibition of traditional Japanese wares in Paris in 1878. Responding also to local vernacular wares, the potter Ernest Chaplet was among the first to explore its potential. Japanese style also prompted an altogether looser aesthetic, with an interest in organic forms, rich surface patination, and abstracted decoration.


Object details

Object type
Materials and techniques
Stoneware with glazed, enamelled and gilded decoration
Brief description
Glazed, enamelled and gilded stoneware bowl by Chaplet and Dammouse, Paris ca. 1885.
Physical description
Brown stoneware bowl with glazed, enamelled and gilded decoration in the Japanese taste.
Dimensions
  • Height: 7.5cm
  • Diameter: 12.7cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • A circle in the form of a rosary around 'H & Co, 132, 50, 50' (makers marks impressed)
  • 'MUSÉE DES ARTS DECORATIFS EXPOSITION 1932, Ms HAVILAND' & '80/10' (paper labels)
Gallery label
BOWL Ernest Chaplet (1829-1909) Maker A. L. Dammouse E.-A. Dammouse Probable decorators Paris: about 1885 Stoneware with glazed, enamelled and gilded decoration C.308-1983 Chaplet, a potter much respected by his contemporaries, worked for Haviland & Co., probably from 1882, when he started a workshop at Rue Blomet, Auteuil, to develop stonewares and related glazes. Albert Louis Dammouse (1848-1926) and his brother, Edouard Alexandre, were among his most successful collaborators. Brown stoneware with decoration in the Japanese taste is a hall-mark of the Chaplet and Dammouse combined experiments, of which this bowl is probably an example. It is marked with Chaplet's insignia, a circle formed as a rosary, and the factory monogram, 'H.&C.'.
Object history
Purchased from Dr Paul Tauchner, Maria-Theresia, Straße 12, D.8000, München, 80.

Historical significance: Ernest Chaplet (1835-1909), born at Sèvres, began work at the State factory at the age of 12. He became a highly skilled ceramicist working in potteries at Choisy-le-Roi and Bourg-la-Reine and then for the Limoges manufacturers, the Haviland brothers, at a new workshop in Auteuil. In 1881 Haviland provided him with a studio at rue Blomet, Vaugirard, Paris. There he developed high temperature glazes on porcelain, and on stoneware while working with AL Dammouse (1848-1926) and other collaborators. In 1886 he bought the workshop and concentrated on these glazes, as an independent potter, keeping his glazes recipes and firing temperatures a closely-guarded secret. He was regarded by his contemporaries as the consummate ceramicist. Chaplet sold the workshop to Auguste Delaherche in 1887 and moved back to Choisy-le-Roi where he specialised in porcelain.
Historical context
The treatment of the curving foliage is very similar to the famous vase acquired by the Danish collector Salomonsen, now in the Museum of Decorative Arts, Copenhagen.
Summary
This stoneware vase, with its stylized pattern of leaves and blossom, enriched with gilding is in the Japanese style. The elevation of stoneware to an art medium in France followed the exhibition of traditional Japanese wares in Paris in 1878. Responding also to local vernacular wares, the potter Ernest Chaplet was among the first to explore its potential. Japanese style also prompted an altogether looser aesthetic, with an interest in organic forms, rich surface patination, and abstracted decoration.
Bibliographic references
  • Paris, Musée des Arts Décoratifs: Ernest Chaplet, catalogue, 1976 d'Albis, J.: 'Chaplet Master Potter', in Connoisseur, ?June, 1976, pp129-136 Roger-Marx: 'Souvenirs sur Ernest Chaplet'; Art et Decoration, xxvii, Jan-June, 1910, pp.89-98 D'Albis, Jean, Ernest Chaplet (Musée des Arts Decoratifs, 1976), pp. 41-6.
  • D'Albis, Jean, 'Chaplet Master Potter', in Connoisseur, 1976
  • Greenhalgh, Paul (Ed.), Art Nouveau: 1890-1914 . London: V&A Publications, 2000 pp.196-7, 204
Collection
Accession number
C.308-1983

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Record createdApril 10, 2000
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